The reader's perception of black men is suppressed men who are forced to bear the burden of their ancestors, are discriminated against the level of pigs, and are lowered to that level. He told the jury that he can not kill anyone when he implied that Jefferson's lawyer is on a chair like a dead of pigs that he attacks the entire African American race It also became. What acts on the command, one that holds the plow handle, or one that loads the veil.
This historical background reminded me when Gains wrote "The lesson before death". Bayonne represents a fixed town on the south, reflecting all these problems. . The narrator, Grant Wiggins, grew up on the Pichot Plantation where parents were farmers. This plantation is part of the background story of most hero. Jefferson was sentenced to death as not committing a crime, where he worked until arrested. And Grant's aunt was a chef there too. As he recognizes the unfairness of black employment opportunities in society, grants are always upset when adults enter plantation.
Ernest Gains' novel "Lessons before death" will be published in Louisiana. There, the hero, a young black man accompanied by a decline in mental power, Jefferson discovered himself in a liquor store, he decided to rob it. Unfortunately, the owner and the two men were killed. Therefore, when a white male entered the store and Jefferson had a bottle in his hand, he was arrested by a white jury and sentenced to death. Prior to the integration, the setting of Louisiana in the 1940s clearly decided the direction of the Gains Festival. The time and place of "learning before death" is very important, with the theme of racism discrimination as the theme. Jefferson was immediately sentenced to death and there was no hope of appeal
A black man, Jefferson, who was sentenced to death by an electric chair in Ernest J. Gains 'Lessons before Death' is probably the strongest person in today's African-American literature. Jefferson was a brave young black man and all white juries found he was not a crime of murder. But he will not yet allow this failure to destroy his personal character. Ernest Gains explained Jefferson in this way and shows that human failure does not necessarily lead to his basic belief in destruction. Using Jefferson's behavior, the author still enjoys external comfort, shows compassion to others, and seeks to improve himself before he ends. These behaviors clearly show that although society may regard Jefferson as a black murderer, he still managed to know that he retained good human qualities.